In this preaching series and church campaign, Andy Stanley looks at the early Christians, showing that generosity was the hallmark of the early church. Generosity changed everything. It changed the world once, it could happen again.

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“When Andy originally presented this to his church, I asked for the outlines and repreached it to mine. I told him I would do everything I could to get it into as many hands as possible.” - Craig Groeschel

Do people in your congregation …

Ever stand in front of a closet full of clothes trying to find something to wear?

Ever trade in a perfectly good car for another … car?

Ever go shopping just to relax?

According to author and pastor Andy Stanley, if you answered yes to any of those questions, you might pastor a rich congregation.

But you might think, rich is the other guy. Rich is that other church. Rich is having more than you currently have. If that’s the case, you can be rich and not know it. You can be rich and not feel it. You can be rich and not act like it. And that is a problem.

Most of us are richer than we think. We just aren’t very good at it. This four-week preaching series and small group study exploring 1 Timothy 6:18 is a tool that will force conversation around the topic of what to do with what we have.

It’s one thing to BE rich.

Andy wants to help us all be GOOD at it!

This campaign kit includes everything needed for a four-week church campaign:

Communicator, author, and pastor Andy Stanley founded Atlanta-based North Point Ministries in 1995. Today, NPM consists of six churches in the Atlanta area and a network of 30 churches around the globe that collectively serve nearly 70,000 people weekly.

As host of Your Move with Andy Stanley, which delivers over five million messages each month through television and podcasts, and author of more than 20 books, including The New Rules for Love, Sex & Dating; Ask It; How to Be Rich; Deep & Wide; Visioneering; and Next Generation Leader, he is considered one of the most influential pastors in America.

Andy and his wife, Sandra, have three grown children and live near Atlanta.